Meanings Beneath the Skin

The Evolution of African-Americans

By (author) Sherle L. Boone

Hardback - £99.00

Publication date:

16 December 2011

Length of book:

424 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

ISBN-13: 9781442213104

Questions about the identity of American-born people of African descent have been debated throughout American History. It is widely assumed that the process of adaptation to a racially stratified society influenced the attitudes, beliefs and emotions of African-Americans. This assumption begs the question, are African Americans a 'new people' with distinctive psychological and cultural traits? The author contends American-born Blacks were gradually transformed from 'Africans living in America' into a 'new people' with different racial conceptualizations and global worldviews from their African ancestors.

The author argues that meanings attributed to the concept of race are of paramount importance in the psychological functioning of African Americans. Novel circumstances surrounding the process of adapting to oppression in a racially stratified society compelled African Americans to attribute unique meanings to the concept of race in ways that reflected the nature of their experience in America. This book shows how African Americans' conceptions of race may operate in a manner that distinguishes them from others of African descent.
This is useful for readers, as it helps them to see the application of history to our present day—something that many psychologists and sociologists do not expand upon as much as Boone does. ... this work will definitely help scholars in their studies of how history has formed a unique ethnic group: the African Americans.